Park Tools

Find Us On

Air Quality

On a clear day, the Tetons appear to rise up out of Yellowstone's lodgepole forest. Both Grand Teton and Yellowstone national parks have been designated as Class I airsheds.

NPS/Neal Herbert

The Clean Air Act Amendments of 1977 designated Yellowstone and Grand Teton among the 156 na­tional parks and wilderness areas that are Class I airsheds, requiring the most stringent air quality protec­tion within and around their boundaries. Yellowstone and Grand Teton are in compliance with federal air quality standards for human health. However, air-quality trends may be affecting other aspects of the ecosystem. Even at relatively low levels, such as those found in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, air pol­lution and the subsequent deposition of pollutants in water and soil can leach nutrients from the earth, injure vegetation, and acidify and over-fertilize lakes and streams.

The thin soils, sparse vegetation, short growing seasons, and snow-based water supply of these high elevation areas limits the amount of nitrogen that can be effectively used. Those conditions make the area more vulnerable to the effects of acidification and nutrient enrichment from nitrogen deposition. For ex­ample, nitrogen in precipitation has increased at many Western sites as a result of fertilizer use and feedlots. Although nitrogen is a nutrient needed for plant growth, too much nitrogen disrupts native plant com­munities that are adapted to low-nitrogen conditions; high nitrogen levels can advance the spread of nonna­tive species that increase fire frequency. Acidification of high alpine lakes from sulfur and nitrogen deposi­tion can cause the loss of macroinvertebrates and fish. Long-term changes in the composition of algae in several alpine lakes in Yellowstone and Grand Teton are correlated with increased nitrogen.

Naturally-occurring ozone in the upper atmo­sphere protects life by absorbing the sun's ultra­violet rays, while ground-level ozone is a pollutant that forms when nitrogen oxides from vehicles, power plants, and other sources combine with volatile organic compounds. Ozone concentrations in Yellowstone typically peak in spring rather than summer, indicating that human influences are less significant than changes in atmospheric circulation and lengthening daylight. Nonetheless, in addition to potentially causing respiratory problems in people, ozone levels during the growing season may be high enough to prevent sensitive species, such as aspen, from reaching full growth potential.

Sources of Particulate Matter

The largest source of particulate matter in Greater Yellowstone is smoke from wildland fires, which is considered part of the area's "natural background conditions" and is taken into consideration in estab­lishing the threshold for "good" visibility. Emissions from prescribed fires have been relatively insignifi­cant. Because of prevailing winds, Wyoming oil and gas development has not had a detectable effect on air quality in Yellowstone.

NPS Air Quality Program

Learn more about air quality, and resources sensitive to air quality, in the National Park System.
Read More